Brett Halliday - Date with a Dead Man
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- Название:Date with a Dead Man
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- Год:неизвестен
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She turned her back on him and bent down to rummage in the bottom drawer.
Shayne smothered an exasperated oath, and leaned over the railing to clamp a heavy hand on her shoulder. “I haven’t retired yet,” he growled. “We’ve still got an office to run this morning, and a couple of murders to clear up. After that you can walk out and be damned. But right now we’ve got work to do. Has the morning mail been delivered?”
She remained bent over and he felt her slender body shudder beneath his hand. In a stifled voice she said, “Ten minutes ago. I put it on your desk… unopened.”
“Come in while I open it,” he said gruffly. “If the stuff from Mrs. Wallace is here, we’re going to be ready for a fast wind-up.”
He gave her shoulder a final squeeze, turned away and long-legged it into his private office without looking back to see if she was following.
A neat pile of letters lay in front of the swivel chair behind his desk. He put the package from Ben Ames beside it, and pawed through the letters, extracting an eight-by-ten manila envelope with Mrs. Leon Wallace’s return address in the upper left corner.
He laid it aside with a grunt of satisfaction and picked up Ames’s parcel as Lucy came in with her head held high and her cheeks flaming scarlet. “If you think for one moment, Michael Shayne…”
“Cut it for now,” he said tersely, ripping off the scotch-taped brown wrapping. “I have here a picture taken of Mr. Meredith in Chicago last night. In that envelope from Mrs. Wallace there should be a picture of Leon Wallace and the empty envelopes in which she received the money from him during the past year. Open it up and let’s see what we can see.”
Lucy compressed her lips, and then with quickened interest and despite her anger went around him to pick up the envelope.
Shayne discarded the wrapping paper and took a glossy photograph from between two sheets of cardboard. He laid it on the desk and studied the picture with brooding intensity. It was a full-length shot of a bareheaded young man standing in the doorway of a house. He was slender and about medium height, and his face had a slack-jawed look of astonishment indicating his surprise at the photographer’s flash-gun.
In the meantime, Lucy had extracted a four-by-six wedding photograph in a cheap cardboard frame, and she laid it beside the other one without speaking. The glowing bride was unmistakably Mrs. Wallace, a couple of years younger and prior to the birth of twins, and the beaming young man beside her had a strong, square face and a broad-shouldered body that towered six inches above her.
Shayne shook his red head slowly and his gray eyes were bleak as they moved from one photograph to the other. “See if you can see any resemblance. Damn it, no man could possibly change that much in two or three years.”
“Of course there’s no resemblance at all. You say that’s a picture of Mr. Meredith. The man Albert Hawley’s wife married after she divorced him? Did you think she had married Leon Wallace… under an assumed name?”
“It seemed a reasonable assumption.” Shayne stepped back with a frown. “He was a gardener at the Hawley place and vanished without a trace just about the time she got her divorce… sending his wife money to support his children. Where else did he go, if not off to marry her after deserting his wife?”
“I don’t know,” said Lucy. “But he certainly didn’t turn himself into this picture of Mr. Meredith.”
Shayne said, “No. That’s one thing he didn’t do. Are the envelopes in there?”
Lucy rummaged in the manila envelope from Mrs. Wallace and took out three long pre-stamped envelopes similar to the one Mrs. Wallace had shown them the previous morning. All were addressed in ink to Mrs. Leon Wallace, Littleboro, Florida but none had a return address. They were postmarked in Miami at three-month intervals during the past year.
Shayne studied the three empty envelopes carefully, and suddenly a glint of excitement showed in his eyes. It was also clearly in his voice as he said, “Do we have the original envelope from Wallace? The one she showed us?”
“Yes. I put it in the file with his letter.” Lucy hurried in to her desk, forgetful for the moment that she was no longer Michael Shayne’s secretary, and returned with the first envelope which she laid beside the others.
There was no doubt, as Mrs. Wallace had stated, that all four envelopes had been addressed by the same person, but as Shayne studied them carefully another fact also became apparent.
He told Lucy slowly, “I’m no expert on such things, but I can almost swear that all four envelopes were addressed at the same time with the same pen and same ink. See what you think, angel. They’re all faded to the same degree.”
She leaned close beside him, her shoulder pressing his arm companionably, and after a moment her brown head bobbed excitedly. “I think you’re right, Michael. I believe they were all addressed at exactly the same time.” She looked at him with her brown eyes anxious and a little frightened. “What does that mean?”
“One thing,” he pointed out grimly. “It disposes of those following three envelopes as evidence that Leon Wallace was in Miami when they were mailed to his wife… or even that he was alive at the time.” The trenches in his cheeks deepened, and he turned away abruptly to the water cooler where he mechanically fitted two paper cups together and got a cognac bottle from the filing cabinet to fill them.
As he poured the liquor slowly, he said, “I’m afraid we’re going to have bad news for Mrs. Wallace.”
“You mean… you think he’s dead?”
“If those envelopes were pre-addressed as I think, it certainly indicates that he didn’t expect to be around to mail those thousand-dollar payments to her himself.” Shayne tilted his head and gulped half the liquor just as his telephone rang. Lucy reached for it mechanically and said, “Michael Shayne’s office.” She listened a moment and said, “He’s right here, Chief.” Covering the mouthpiece with her hand, she said, “Chief Gentry. He sounds terribly angry.”
Shayne put the cups down and took the phone, grinning reassuringly at his secretary. He said, “Hi, Will,” and Gentry’s choleric voice bellowed back at him:
“Damn it to hell, Mike, you’ve really put the kibosh on the Meany girl kill. We’ll never get a conviction the way it’s messed up now. And I think I know why you did it, Mike. And if I can prove it, you’re through in Miami. This time I mean it.”
“Wait, Will. What’s the trouble?”
“Trouble?” raged Gentry. “That phony identification of Joel Cross you screwed out of the elevator operator at your hotel. He’s backed down on it now. After we got Gerald Meany sobered up this morning and he persisted in his story that he did start out to your place to get his wife but stopped for a drink on the way and then blacked out… well, I put him in a line-up with Cross and some others and had Matthew down to look them over. And you know what, Mike?” Gentry’s voice became savagely gentle.
Shayne sighed and said, “Tell me.”
“He can’t identify either one of them now. He’s all mixed up. Thinks it must have been one or the other, but he can’t swear which. Personally I think Meany is guilty as hell, but we’ll never get a conviction when a defense lawyer puts Matthew on the stand and extracts the story of his first positive identification of Cross.”
Shayne said, “That’s tough, Will. But when a man makes an honest mistake…”
“Honest mistake, hell!” raged Gentry. “The way I’ve been piecing things together, Cross was absolutely right when he accused you of putting Matthew up to identifying him. Just, by God, so you could get him thrown in the jug long enough for you to get your hands on the Groat diary.”
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